Piano Mint

Piano Mint

Yamaha P95 Digital Piano Keyboard P 95 P95B Black in MINT CONDITION
Yamaha P95 Digital Piano Keyboard P 95 P95B Black in MINT CONDITION
Paypal   US $494.95
Yamaha DC3 Disklavier Grand Piano DKC500R XG CONTROL UNIT Mint
Yamaha DC3 Disklavier Grand Piano DKC500R XG CONTROL UNIT Mint
Paypal   US $250.00
Near Mint Condition Yamaha G1J S E Conservatory Classic Collection Grand Piano
Near Mint Condition Yamaha G1J S E Conservatory Classic Collection Grand Piano
Paypal   US $7,150.00
Kawai CX 5H Upright Piano 1999 mint condition original paperwork
Kawai CX 5H Upright Piano 1999 mint condition original paperwork
Paypal   US $1,800.00
Bergman Upright Piano Mint  Includes Dehumidifier
Bergman Upright Piano Mint Includes Dehumidifier
Paypal   US $1,800.00
RARE Mint Pianocorder Kohler  Campbell Jorgen Hansen Heirloom upright piano
RARE Mint Pianocorder Kohler Campbell Jorgen Hansen Heirloom upright piano
Paypal   US $2,995.00
Chicago YAMAHA C 3 grand piano Ebony Polish one owner only mint condition
Chicago YAMAHA C 3 grand piano Ebony Polish one owner only mint condition
Paypal   US $12,950.00
2011 YAMAHA C7 semi concert grand piano Ebony Polish mint condition
2011 YAMAHA C7 semi concert grand piano Ebony Polish mint condition
Paypal   US $39,990.00
Kawai Upright piano 1991MINT Same as Yamaha U2 U3
Kawai Upright piano 1991MINT Same as Yamaha U2 U3
Paypal   US $3,450.00
Baldwin Upright Piano MINT 1 2 Retail Made in OHIO USA non smoker home
Baldwin Upright Piano MINT 1 2 Retail Made in OHIO USA non smoker home
Paypal   US $1,795.00
Kawai RX 6 Semi Concert Grand Piano 7 foot 1997 Polished Ebony Mint
Kawai RX 6 Semi Concert Grand Piano 7 foot 1997 Polished Ebony Mint
Paypal   US $25,000.00
J Becker Baby Grand Piano MINT
J Becker Baby Grand Piano MINT
Paypal   US $4,500.00
Boston Grand Piano GP156 mint condition NEW PRICE
Boston Grand Piano GP156 mint condition NEW PRICE
Paypal   US $10,000.00
Yamaha P155 Digital Piano Black w Mahogany Top 88 key Graded Hammer MINT
Yamaha P155 Digital Piano Black w Mahogany Top 88 key Graded Hammer MINT
Paypal   US $929.99
Yamaha Upright Piano U2 50 1983 Mint Reconditioned U 2 w Warranty Beautiful
Yamaha Upright Piano U2 50 1983 Mint Reconditioned U 2 w Warranty Beautiful
Paypal   US $3,590.00
Yamaha Upright Piano U1 U 1H Mint Reconditioned Warranty
Yamaha Upright Piano U1 U 1H Mint Reconditioned Warranty
Paypal   US $3,290.00
Stunning BABY GRAND PIANO with QRS CD GULBRANSEN Mint Played Twice
Stunning BABY GRAND PIANO with QRS CD GULBRANSEN Mint Played Twice
Paypal   US $2,700.00
Kawai 61 GS 30 MINT Grand piano w bench BHA
Kawai 61 GS 30 MINT Grand piano w bench BHA
Paypal   US $10,900.00
Kawai 61 RX 3 MINT 1997 Grand piano w bench BHA
Kawai 61 RX 3 MINT 1997 Grand piano w bench BHA
Paypal   US $13,600.00
STEINWAY  SONS GRAND PIANO MODEL O MINT CONDITION VINTAGE AMAZING
STEINWAY SONS GRAND PIANO MODEL O MINT CONDITION VINTAGE AMAZING
Paypal   US $16,500.00
Kawai GM 2 Gloss Black Baby Grand Piano Mint
Kawai GM 2 Gloss Black Baby Grand Piano Mint
Paypal   US $7,000.00
ROLAND KR117M Intelligent Grand Piano MINT
ROLAND KR117M Intelligent Grand Piano MINT
Paypal   US $14,995.00
KOHLER  CAMPBELL GRAND PIANO 2006 59 MINT CONDITION
KOHLER CAMPBELL GRAND PIANO 2006 59 MINT CONDITION
   US $8,995.00
VINTAGE DISNEY XYLO PIANO MICKEY BAND BONTEMPI MIB MINT
VINTAGE DISNEY XYLO PIANO MICKEY BAND BONTEMPI MIB MINT
Paypal   US $49.99
VINTAGE DISNEY XYLO PIANO MICKEY BAND BONTEMPI MOC MINT
VINTAGE DISNEY XYLO PIANO MICKEY BAND BONTEMPI MOC MINT
Paypal   US $49.99
Kawai CP185 digital baby grand piano mint condition estate sale
Kawai CP185 digital baby grand piano mint condition estate sale
Paypal   US $3,500.00

MEIKO - piano x forte x scandal / [Mint]

What Happens When Money Dies

I didn't come up with the phrase "when money dies," however I think it is a very appropriate phrase to use and understand as part of today’s (circa January 2011) economic conditions.

The phrase captures an important idea that paper money issued by governments has a finite life; at some point, it becomes worthless, or dies.

Paper money is called a fiat currency when it is not linked to something that is a store of value like gold or silver. Throughout all of history, fiat currencies have had a 100% failure rate.

The death of a currency is often a protracted affair.

It takes years and when it unfolds, the people who experience it, hardly believe it.

This is the tale told by Adam Fergusson in his book When Money Dies.

First published in 1975, the book has been out-of-print for years however the demand for the book remained high. A used copy on Amazon recently cost $800 however Public Affairs reissued it in October of last year (2010).

The book is a history of the death of the German mark in the 1920s. It is also a scary reminder of the devastating effects of inflation and a cautionary tale for U.S. central bankers and politicians who play so fast and loose with the U.S. Dollar which became a true fiat currency in 1971. At that time, President Nixon removed the link between the US Dollar and gold (which had a value of $35 an ounce); and all of the gold owned by the US is stored at Fort Knox in Kentucky.

If you don't know what happened to the German mark, here's what you need to know from the book When Money Dies.

In 1913, the German mark, the British shilling, the French franc and the Italian lira were all worth about the same; four or five of any of these would buy you a U.S. Dollar.

By 1923, a decade later, you could exchange one shilling, franc or lira for up to 1 trillion marks. "Although," Fergusson writes, "in practice, by then, no one was willing to take marks in return for anything. The mark was dead, one million-millionth of its former self. It had taken 10 years to die."

How did that happen?

The short answer is that post-Imperial Germany found itself with a crushing load of debt. Raising taxes or cutting spending is politically difficult in any age. And so it was in Germany. To deal with these debts, Germany chose the path of least resistance; it printed lots and lots of money.

Sounds like the fiscal position the U.S. government finds itself in today; bleeding deficits with no end in sight.

And then we add to these deficits, more debt and entitlements with no end in sight.

The solution so far is "quantitative easing" which is more money printing.

In a new introduction, Fergusson writes: "Money may no longer be physically printed and distributed in the voluminous quantities of 1923. However, ‘quantitative easing,' that modern euphemism for surreptitious deficit financing in an electronic era, can no less become an assault on monetary discipline."

Now let’s go back to understand the situation in early 20th century Germany.

Eventually, prices started to rise as the mark lost purchasing power. One of the great strengths of the book is the on-the-ground view you get from the people who lived through it. It gives you an unsettling look at German society as it starts to dissolve and as inflation starts to wreak havoc.

It started slowly, with commodity prices starting to rise everywhere. But as the years wore on, prices kept going up in big steps; soon the damage was remarkable.

In just eight years since 1913, the price of rye bread rose 13-fold. Beef rose 17-fold. Sugar, milk, pork and potatoes went up 23-28-fold. Butter went up 33-fold! And these were official prices. As a practical matter, real prices were often a third higher. It is hard to fathom.

All this brought out the worst in people. Germany became an ugly society, looking for blame. As Fergusson writes: "They picked upon other classes, other races, other political parties, other nations." There was a long list of villains: "the greed of tourists, or the peasants, or the wage demands of labor, or the selfishness of industrialists and profiteers, or the sharpness of Jews or the speculators making fortunes in the money markets."

Erna von Pustau, who lived through it, described what it was like. She said "My allowance and all the money I earned were not worth one cup of coffee. You could go to the baker in the morning and buy two rolls for 20 marks; but go there in the afternoon and the same two rolls were 25 marks. The baker didn't know how it happened. His customers didn't know how it happened. It had somehow to do with the US Dollar, somehow to do with the stock exchange, and somehow, maybe, it had to do with the Jews."

As we know what would happen later in Germany, her comments are particularly chilling.

Each year, people thought it could not get worse. "And yet things always did get worse; it went from bad to worse," Fergusson writes. "It was unimaginable in 1921 that 1922 could hold any more terrors. They came, sure enough, and were in due course more than eclipsed, with the turn of the following year."

Germany plunged into hyperinflation. The price changes get ridiculous to talk about, the numbers so large that they are practically meaningless. Who can imagine paying 500 billion marks for a dozen eggs?

It's also interesting to see how society dealt with this breakdown in the currency. The idea of real wealth became very important. Not the kind of wealth denominated in abstract printed marks but real wealth that one could use.

People bought things. Hugo Stinnes, an industrialist, bought factories, mines, newspapers. The man on the street bought what he could trade.

Fergusson ends with a powerful observation: "In war, boots; in flight, a seat on a boat or train may be the most vital thing in the world; more desirable than untold millions of worthless paper currency.

In hyperinflation, a kilo of potatoes was worth, to some, more than the family silver; a side of pork more than the grand piano."

Despite the awful experience of the 1920s, Germany would repeat its errors again and again. In the 1930s, Hitler would crank up the presses to print more money. By 1948, the reichsmark (which replaced the old mark) died. So Germany created the deutsche mark. Yet it wasn't much better. It lost two-thirds of its purchasing power by 1975.

Such is the fate of all paper money and fiat currencies. Repeating a fact from earlier in this blog post, throughout all of history, fiat currencies have had a 100% failure rate.

I will leave it to you to decide how much relevance Germany's experience has to the U.S. today. I find many alarming parallels.

I would point out, too, that the U.S. Dollar has lost 98% of its purchasing power since 1913. And the U.S. Dollar is among the best currencies of the last hundred years. That says something about paper currencies, doesn't it?

It's also why staying ahead of inflation is one of the chief tasks of investing.

In a previous (circa Dec 2010) blog post, it was highlighted that a recent Wall Street Journal article points out “Corn is up 44%, milk is up 6.5%, hot rolled coil steel is up 4%, copper is up 29% and oil is up 14% from a year ago.”

Across Corporate America, more companies are wrestling with when and how much to raise prices as raw materials costs climb.

Also, the prices of gold and silver are up too. All of these things point to the obvious: The US Dollar is buying less.

We are seeing today the beginnings of real inflation. It can and will get much worse.

As a way to justify Quantitative Easing, which is more money printing by the Federal Reserve Bank, the Fed tells us inflation is under control. In fact, it is complaining that the inflation rate may be too low.

This is like the New York Police Department complaining about the lack of crimes.

Ben Bernanke, the current chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank, would have us believe the Fed can calibrate inflation within tolerances of 100 basis points. But it way overestimates its powers. Once the inflation train gets going, it will be very hard to slow down (remember former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker chose to raise interest rates to 22% in the early 1980s to whip inflation). One day, the Fed will wish inflation were only 2%.

In the meantime, what to do? Obtain more financial education and learn how to protect yourself during these trying times.

I favor a quote from Steve Forbes … Forbes says that pursuing additional financial education and the resulting increase in our financial literacy will open our eyes to being savvy with our money and using alternative wealth creating strategies; this will be they key to resolving our financial crisis.

To gain the necessary financial education, it is best to pursue association with, access to, and membership in, a wealth creation community. As a result, you will learn about alternative wealth creating strategies and consider investments in non-dollar denominated assets … perhaps emerging markets … perhaps energy assets that are inherently useful like oil rigs, hydropower, or methanol plants … perhaps precious metals, rare earths, water rights, oil, natural gas, potash mines, or gold mines … things hard to build, difficult to replace, and costly to substitute … definitely not financial stocks, definitely not retail stocks, definitely not commercial property.

For those wanting protection of their purchasing power in gold, there are several ways that may be appropriate to obtain this protection. These include direct ownership in minted coins, use of gold exchange traded funds, gold mutual funds, and junior gold stocks. Many are investigating having part of their IRAs in gold, silver, precious metals, and non-dollar denominated currencies.

In addition, for those that truly believe sovereign risk is the greatest risk we all face, it is wise to learn how to implement a multiple flag strategy to diversify this risk or provide protection against higher taxes, capital controls, hyperinflation, civil unrest, erosion of personal liberty, and the rise of a police state. With a multiple flag system, you consider taking preparations like, but not limited to, establishing a foreign bank account, purchasing some real estate overseas, seeking alternate sources of income, dual citizenship, and carrying multiple passports.

I will continue to provide examples of things we need to learn, the secrets of the insiders, as part of being savvy with our money, and introduce alternative wealth creating strategies, in future articles and updates at my blog over the next few weeks.

In addition, a good book to read would be “When Money Dies” by Adam Fergusson; it describes the nightmare of deficit spending, devaluation, and hyperinflation in Weimar Germany.

Also, I want to thank Chris Mayer at Agora Financial as he was the source of some of the ideas and material about Capital & Crisis investing mentioned in this post.

In closing, be sure to Meet Me at my website, WhoIsMikeFarrell; Read Posts about my Internet Marketing Business at aspenIbiz blogspot; and Obtain Some Tips About Being No 1 on Google at apenIbiz My Go-To-Market Partners website; and Learn How to Live Longer at aspenIbiz My Life’s Advantage Today site.

Finally, I would like to provide Best Wishes for a Prosperous New Year!
About the Author

http://www.myCFYMblog.com
Mike Farrell is a Marketing Consultant, works with businesses to use Internet Marketing for their advertising and PR needs, and develops campaigns that drive highly qualified traffic to online properties for commercial purposes.

alcohol commercial (song)?

There's this commercial and it has a happy up beat sound to it.
The commercial Theme is like a ball and they go in to a different room then there's a guy playing the Piano then they show the drink and there like pressing mint in the cup then it says the name of the drink.
I was wondering what the song is called or what the drink is called so at least I can try to figure it out by goggling the drink =

barcardi mojito>>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0rx1srLsh0